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Community Response Network

A structured civilian response system designed to reduce time-to-care in coastal emergencies.

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Puerto Rico does not operate under a mandated open-water lifeguard system, and historically has never had an integrated aquatic safety infrastructure.

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For hotels, beachfront properties, and municipalities, this creates operational exposure.

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The Community Response Network (CRN) provides a structured, trained, infrastructure-supported response layer that activates before professional emergency services arrive.

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This is coordinated preparedness — not improvisation.

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Why the Community Response Network Is Necessary

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Emergency response conditions vary significantly across Puerto Rico.

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• Ambulance arrival times differ between metropolitan and coastal regions
• EMS staffing levels are not always consistent
• In some cases, response units may not include advanced life support personnel

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For municipalities and hospitality operators, relying solely on external response may not align with best risk-management practices.

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Prepared on-site response reduces liability exposure and improves survivability outcomes.

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What the Community Response Network Provides

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Trained On-Site Responders
Hospitality staff, municipal personnel, beach operators, and community members trained in CPR, AED deployment, hazard recognition, and structured emergency coordination.

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Integration With Public Rescue Infrastructure
Responders are trained to utilize existing rescue infrastructure including public AEDs, rescue stations, flotation devices, and coordinated extraction procedures.

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Infrastructure + training = measurable preparedness.

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Structured Emergency Action Planning (EAP)
Each participating property or municipality develops a localized Emergency Action Plan that includes:

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• Role assignment during incidents
• EMS activation protocol
• Pre-identified hospital routes
• Drive-time awareness
• Direct hospital notification procedures

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Prepared systems reduce chaos during real events.

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How the Network Activates

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  1. Incident Identified
    Trained personnel recognize distress, cardiac events, or drowning risk.

  2. Immediate Role Assignment
    One individual activates 9-1-1.
    One retrieves equipment.
    One manages scene coordination.

  3. Equipment Deployment
    Rescue stations and AEDs are utilized when appropriate.

  4. Coordinated Transfer of Care
    Clear communication is provided to EMS and/or receiving medical facilities, including timeline, interventions performed, and patient condition.

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This structured approach reduces time-to-care and improves operational clarity.

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Training Standards

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CRN training includes:

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• CPR & AED certification
• Coastal hazard recognition
• I.A.C.I.S. risk management methodology (Identify, Assess, Control, Implement, Supervise)
• Scene leadership and communication under pressure
• Transport decision-making when EMS delays occur
• Hospital pre-notification protocol

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Training is scenario-based and built specifically for Puerto Rico’s emergency response realities.

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Who Should Participate

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• Hotels and beachfront resorts
• Municipal emergency management departments
• Parks and recreation staff
• Property managers
• Surf schools and water sports operators
• Public safety personnel

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Any entity operating in coastal environments assumes shared exposure during water-related incidents.

Prepared institutions reduce operational risk.

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What Makes This Network Different

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This is not a replacement for lifeguards.

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This is not an informal volunteer effort.

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This is not reactive improvisation.

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It is:

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• Structured
• Documented
• Infrastructure-supported
• Integrated with formal emergency services

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It is a survivability framework designed for real-world coastal operations.

 

Measured Impact in Rincón

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0 drownings in Rincón in 2024
(Historical average: approximately 5 per year prior to 2023)

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RWS believes this outcome is partly influenced by:

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• Community training
• Public rescue infrastructure
• Structured Emergency Action Planning

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Long-term data will continue to measure sustained impact.

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Strengthen Preparedness Before an Emergency Occurs

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In coastal environments, seconds matter.

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Prepared staff reduce hesitation.
Clear roles reduce liability.
Structured response improves outcomes.

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[Button: Schedule Institutional Training]
[Button: Develop a Site-Specific Emergency Action Plan]

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